Publications by authors named "Xourafa A"

Article Synopsis
  • Vitamin D deficiency is a significant public health issue in Europe, affecting not just the elderly but also those aged 50-70 years across both genders.
  • A recent survey involving 870 subjects in Italy found that dietary vitamin D intake was alarmingly low, with average daily intakes of 5.05 μg for females and 6.25 μg for males, which is below the recommended average.
  • The data revealed a trend where vitamin D intake decreases with age, indicating that older adults are particularly at risk for potential hypovitaminosis due to inadequate dietary consumption.
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Bone is a vital tissue as it carries out various metabolic functions: support of the body, protection of the internal organs, mineral deposit and hematopoietic functions [...

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines the relationship between chronic kidney disease (CKD), bone strength, and fracture risk in patients undergoing hemodialysis, focusing on various bone quality measures and muscle strength.
  • - Key findings include significant associations between bone ultrasound measurements and bone mineral density, as well as between handgrip strength and the estimated 10-year probability of fractures.
  • - Among hemodialysis participants, a higher percentage reported vertebral fractures compared to a control group, with differences in bone metrics like trabecular bone score and cortical thickness observed between those with and without fractures.
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Background: Breast cancer is the most commonly occurring cancer in women worldwide. Early breast cancer is a kind of invasive neoplasm that has not proliferated beyond the breast or the axillary lymph nodes. Current therapeutic strategies for breast cancer mainly include local therapies such as surgery or radiotherapy and systemic therapies like chemotherapy, endocrine, and targeted therapy.

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Background: Irisin, a myokine, is a polypeptide derived from the cleavage of the extracellular domain of fibronectin domain-containing protein 5, a receptor that is present on different tissues (skeletal muscle, pericardium, myocardium, and brain), whose functions are not yet fully defined.

Purpose: The main aim of our study was to evaluate the effect of competitive physical activity on serum irisin levels and bone turnover markers.

Methods: Fifteen male footballers and an equal number of subjects of the same age and gender, but with a predominantly sedentary lifestyle, had their serum levels of irisin and bone turnover markers measured.

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Osteopoikilosis (OP) is a rare autosomal dominant sclerosing bone disease, caused by heterozygous mutations in the LEMD3 gene. It is characterised by numerous focal lamellar bone compact deposits in the spongiosa. In this case report, we describe a famliar case of OP and review the literature.

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Osteoporosis and atherosclerosis are significant public health problems that often coexist, especially in the elderly. Although some studies have reported an age-dependent relationship, others have suggested a causal relationship between osteoporosis and atherosclerosis. The aim of our study was to evaluate the cardiovascular risk in a population of patients with osteoporosis by measuring carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV).

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Background: The association between Paget's disease of bone (PDB) and increased cardiovascular (CV) risk has been suggested, but the literature is conflicting.

Objective: Our study aimed to evaluate two markers of CV risk, namely, common carotid artery intimamedia thickness (cIMT) and the aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) in patients with PDB.

Methods: We enrolled 12 patients with PDB and 58 control subjects, matched for age.

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Secondary osteoporosis is a common clinical problem faced by bone specialists, with a higher frequency in men than in women. One of several causes of secondary osteoporosis is hematological disease. There are numerous hematological diseases that can have a deleterious impact on bone health.

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The Cardiorenal Syndrome type 4 (CRS-4) defines a pathological condition in which a primary chronic kidney disease (CKD) leads to a chronic impairment of cardiac function. The pathophysiology of CRS-4 and the role of arterial stiffness remain only in part understood. Several uremic toxins, such as uric acid, phosphates, advanced glycation end-products, asymmetric dimethylarginine, and endothelin-1, are also vascular toxins.

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Anticoagulant agents are widely used in the treatment of thromboembolic events and in stroke prevention. Data about their effects on bone tissue are in some cases limited or inconsistent (oral anti-vitamin K agents), and in others are sufficiently strong (heparins) to suggest caution in their use in subjects at risk of osteoporosis. This review analyses the effects of this group of drugs on bone metabolism, on bone mineral density, and on fragility fractures.

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Hemodynamic dysfunction mainly characterizes pathophysiology of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) leading to chronic ischemia. Hemodynamic dysfunction is the origin of intermittent claudication (chronic PAD) or of critical limb ischemia (very severe PAD). Notably, it is well known that oxidative stress (OxS) plays a pathophysiological role in PAD.

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Acquired neuralgic amyotrophy, described for the first time by Parsonage and Turner, is a rare idiopathic disease that may occur in otherwise normal healthy individuals. It typically begins with sudden, unilateral shoulder pain that may also involve the neck and/or arm. Less frequently, the disease involves nerves other than those of the brachial plexus, such as phrenic nerves, resulting in dyspnoea.

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Osteoporosis and atherosclerosis are two chronic degenerative diseases that share several biochemical pathways and risk factors. Previous studies have associated osteoporosis with carotid atherosclerosis, cardiovascular mortality and stroke, but data on the relationship with peripheral artery disease are few and conflicting. The OPG/RANK/RANKL system and Wnt/beta catenin signaling seem to be deeply involved in the pathogenesis of bone alterations and atherosclerotic processes also affect arteries of the lower extremities.

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Due to increasing life expectancy in thalassemia major (TM), osteoporosis is emerging as a significant problem. Its aetiology is multifactorial, culminating in increased bone resorption and impaired remodelling. Hypogonadism and marrow expansion seem to play an important role, but iron overload, deferoxamine toxicity, a defective growth hormone-insulin-like growth factor-1 axis and multiple endocrinopathies may represent additional causes of bone damage.

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Osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease are worldwide public health issues. Recent evidence indicates a possible role of the canonical Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway as a common mediator between these two diseases. The aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship between serum concentrations of sclerostin and Dkk1, two extracellular inhibitors of Wnt/β-catenin signalling, with carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) and with arterial stiffness, evaluated by measuring the pulse wave velocity (PWV) in an ambulatory population of adults.

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Purpose: Denosumab has been proven to reduce fracture risk in breast cancer (BC) women under aromatase inhibitors (AIs). Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) provides information on the structure and elastic properties of bone. Our aim was to assess bone health by phalangeal QUS and by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), and to evaluate bone turnover in AIs-treated BC women receiving denosumab.

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Objective: Phalangeal quantitative ultrasound (QUS) measurements provide surrogate information on bone quality. The aim of the present study was to assess bone status by phalangeal QUS and by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), and to evaluate bone turnover in breast cancer (BC) women receiving aromatase inhibitors (AIs).

Methods: Sixty postmenopausal BC women and 42 matched controls were recruited (mean age 61.

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Objectives: To evaluate the role of genetic background in osteoporosis/osteopenia development in beta-Thalassemia Major patients.

Design And Methods: The influence of VDR (FokI, BsmI) as well as COLIA1 (Sp1) gene polymorphisms on BMD was investigated in 40 patients.

Results: Although the examined gene polymorphisms did not significantly affect BMD variations in our population, BsmI was found to display beneficial effects on patient response to alendronate therapy.

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Thalassemia major is a common cause of skeletal morbidity, as shown by the increased fracture risk in thalassemic patients. The etiology of this bone disease is multifactorial and culminates in a state of increased bone turnover with excessive bone resorption and remodeling. Despite hormonal replacement therapy, calcium and vitamin D administration, effective iron chelation, and normalization of hemoglobin levels, patients with thalassemia major continue to lose bone mass.

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Objective: To evaluate in a group of postmenopausal women the effects of long-term raloxifene treatment on breast density using a digitized analysis of mammograms and on insulinlike growth factor-1 (IGF-1), insulinlike growth factor binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3), and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) plasma levels.

Design: Seventy healthy postmenopausal women with normal body weight were enrolled in this study and were divided into two groups based on their bone status, evaluated by dual-energy x-ray at the lumbar spine (L2-4). Fifty women (chronological age 52.

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